The harmless observations of Ugandan, Paul Busharizi. Is it me or are we missing something here?

Monday, January 6, 2014

HEED THE LESSONS OF SOUTH SUDAN

The
chaos of south Sudan is a wake up call for all pre-industrial nations,
that collapse is only a heart beat away and that staving this implosion
is not helped by beefing up security but by improving the general
welfare of the people.

To
give the government of south Sudan the benefit of doubt, it takes more
than a decade to transcend the kind of ethnic divisions that trigger and
perpetuate the violence we are witnessing.

Following
the Rwanda genocide in 1994, observers tried to explain how such a
tragedy could take place and which other countries may be vulnerable to
an atrocity on such a scale as happened in the small East African
nation.

The
government's role in the genocide can not be underestimated, but one
thing they singled out is the lack of ethnic diversity in Rwanda, which
allowed for easier mobilization along ethnic lines. A more diverse
society -- like Uganda say, would be unlikely to see such bloodletting
because it would be difficult to cobble major alliances across ethnic
lines to perpetuate it.

So
if for example you wanted to pit the Banyankole against the Banyoro, it
is unlikely that any other tribe will mobilize en masse in support of
one group against the other. It is even more unlikely that you will get
enough groups on one side or another to form a black-and-white situation
that will not only fan the violence but remain coherent enough over a
long enough period to execute mass genocide.

The post election violence in Kenya in 2007 was proof of this.

The
long time Luo-Kikuyu rivalry for a time tipped the scale into violence
but sanity was able to prevail relatively quickly because no other
tribes bought into the chaos, apart from the Kalenjin to some extent.

In the Kenyan situation -- apart from US gunboat diplomacy, commercial interests prevailed on the situation to calm things down.

That is a luxury south Sudan does not have.

In
his book "The Lexus and the fig tree," Thomas Friedman noted that no
two countries with a McDonald's fast food franchise have ever gone to
war --former Yugoslavia was the exception. He suggested that the
presence of a McDonald's chain is evidence of a large enough middle
class. The middle class, because of their commercial and therefore long
term interest in national stability, often resort to non-violent dispute
resolution. Viable commercial interests are color blind, transcending
race and tribe ensuring greater societal cohesion.

Violence
once unleashed can rarely be contained, taking on a life of its own and
consuming indiscriminately everything in its path. The are no winners
in war, only losers.

South
Sudan comes up empty handed on both counts. It has two tribes, which
between them it is estimated account for 80 percent of the country's
population and no middle class to speak of, the economy never having
grown due to decades of civil unrest.

For
us onlookers our main concern should be a rapid, private sector growth
of the economy, the ideal conditions for the growth of a viable middle
class, if not to forestall future civil war to at least avert the worst
excesses of such an eventuality.

Singapore
patriarch Lee Kuan Yew noted a significant difference in demonstrations
as more and more of the population owned their own homes. He reported
in his book "From third world to first, the Singapore story" how
demonstrators would be seen lugging their mopeds up to their flat before
taking to the street, and that with this background demonstration was
less violent and chaotic.

By
enabling the private sector, especially the indigenous businessman, to
grow through enabling policy jobs are created, wealth is generated and a
middle class of sufficient critical mass comes into being to stabilize
the society and perpetuate this virtuous cycle.

Unfortunately
growing the private sector is often not in the short term interests of
seating governments, unless of course they have strong business
interests themselves. A strong business community provides an
alternative power center, a counter weight to government, which in
lobbying for its own interests can make incumbents very uncomfortable.

But
in the long term a society anchored by a solid middle class will ensure
the protection not only of property but the lives of exiting leaders.

The
point is that all the security apparatus in the world will not
guarantee national stability if poverty continues to run rampant and
there is no hope of social advancement.

The
example of south Sudan is proof enough that the issues of national
stability while they cannot be left to governments alone, these same
governments have a key role in encouraging the growth of the middle
class, regardless of the short term discomfort to themselves.